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UN, EU Reaffirm Backing for Iran Nuclear Deal

UN, EU Reaffirm Backing for Iran Nuclear Deal
UN, EU Reaffirm Backing for Iran Nuclear Deal

The United Nations and European Union have both reiterated their support for the Iran nuclear deal on the first anniversary of the accord’s implementation.

On Monday, Farhan Haq, the deputy spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, reassured the world body’s support for the accord in his daily press briefing.

Haq praised the first anniversary of the JCPOA’s implementation as “a significant milestone in the historic agreement”.

“The United Nations shall continue to support the implementation of the JCPOA, in accordance with Resolution 2231 and other relevant decisions of the Security Council,” he said.

All the other parties to the JCPOA, including the outgoing US administration, Russia and China, have also already stressed the need to sustain the deal amid the threats of US president-elect, Donald Trump.

The deal, officially titled the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, was reached between Iran on the one side and the US, the UK, France, Russia, China and Germany on the other in July 2015. It took effect on January 16, 2016, and terminated nuclear-related sanctions against Iran in return for certain limits on the Iranian nuclear program.

During the course of the negotiations that resulted in the deal, the EU acted as coordinator for the negotiating parties and, together with the UN, hosted the talks. In a statement on Monday, EU’s top diplomat, Federica Mogherini, once again reaffirmed the bloc’s support for the deal in the face of potential threats from the future US administration to undermine it, Press TV reported.

“The full and effective implementation throughout the entire lifetime of the JCPOA remains essential,” said Mogherini.

“The EU has clearly affirmed its resolute commitment to this objective.”

She said the bloc “will continue to work hand in hand with all those willing to contribute to its full implementation and in achieving the objectives which brought us together.”

There has been concern that the incoming Trump administration may breach the deal or stop implementing US commitments under it altogether. Trump has previously threatened to “tear up” the deal.

Throughout her Monday statement, the EU official pointed to the merits and strengths of the deal.

  Working for All

Mogherini said the agreement “is working for all” and now belonged to the entire international community.

“The JCPOA is a multilateral endeavor, achieved through diplomatic means and endorsed by a United Nations Security Council resolution. It was born out of the efforts of the E3/EU+3 [Britain, France and Germany plus Russia, China and the United States] and Iran, but it now belongs to the entire international community. The JCPOA provides benefits for all and creates opportunities for improved regional cooperation that should be seized by all,” she said.

She was referring to Security Council Resolution 2231, which unanimously endorsed the JCPOA on July 20, 2015.

Mogherini highlighted that “Iran has delivered on its nuclear-related commitments as confirmed by the reports issued by the International Atomic Energy Agency”.

The UN nuclear watchdog has taken up the task of monitoring the technical implementation of the Iran deal.

Meanwhile, Trump, in a shift from his usual rhetoric of lambasting the Iran deal, has refused to say what policy he would want to take regarding it, admitting that he is “not a politician”.

“Well, I don’t want to say what I’m gonna do with the Iran deal. I just don’t want to play the cards. I mean, look, I’m not a politician, I don’t go out and say, ‘I’m gonna do this’. I’m gonna do, I gotta do what I gotta do,” he told the British daily the Times on Sunday.

Trump has flip-flopped on policy issues before, too.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, who was his country’s lead negotiator in the talks over the Iran deal, also stressed that the JCPOA was an important and constructive agreement and that Russia would remain committed to it.

Speaking at a UN roundtable on the one-year anniversary of the deal’s implementation, Ryabkov said Russia saw no grounds for any failure to fully implement the deal and downplayed the rhetoric by Trump, TASS reported.

He said very little was known about the “approaches of the next US administration to this issue and the foreign policy agenda in general”.

Ryabkov said while Moscow was studying the public statements of Trump’s advisers and Cabinet nominees made during the US Senate hearings, he saw “no signs ... that a completely new situation will occur”.

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